George J. Sicard (February 24, 1838 - August 26, 1904) was an American attorney who was a law partner of Grover Cleveland.
Early life
Sicard was born in New York City on February 24, 1838.[1] He was the youngest son of prominent merchant Stephen Sicard (1795–1839) and Lydia Eliza (née Hunt) Sicard (1813–1888). Among his siblings were Stephen Sicard and Rear Admiral Montgomery Sicard.[2] After the death of his father in 1839, his mother brought the family to Utica, New York, where her father, Montgomery Hunt, was the long-time cashier of the Bank of Utica.[1]
In 1881, Sicard formed a law partnership with Grover Cleveland and Wilson S. Bissell known as Cleveland, Sicard & Bissell. They practiced together until Cleveland became governor in 1883 and a new partnership was formed with Bissell and Charles W. Goodyear known as Bissell, Sicard & Goodyear. They practiced together until 1887 when Goodyear left the practice of law to focus on his family's lumber and railroad interest.[1] After which Sicard and Bissell formed Bissell, Sicard, Bissell & Carey (with junior partners, Herbert Porter Bissell, a cousin of Wilson Bissell,[5] and Martin C. Carey)[6] until 1893 when Bissell left to become Postmaster General in President Cleveland's cabinet. Sicard left the partnership in 1896,[6] but continued maintained his own practice.[1][a]
Personal life
In 1872 Sicard was married to Sara Esther Movius (1850–1907), a daughter of Julius Movius of Buffalo. Together, they were the parents of two sons and a daughter, including:[1]
Edward M. Sicard (1875–1908), a Yale graduate and attorney who was killed in a car accident.[9]
Sicard died at his home, 196 North Street, Buffalo, New York on August 26, 1904.[1]
References
Notes
^Bissell & Carey later became Bissell, Carey & Cooke when Walter Platt Cooke joined.[7] Another member was Lyman M. Bass, the son of Lyman K. Bass (Cleveland's former law partner), and the firm eventually became Kenefick, Cooke & Mitchell.[8]